Tlie Church Hill Tragedy.—Tan Maboniai; BegUter, published at Youngs* ! 0W n Ohio, says the outbreak which twk place *t Church Hill, on Sunday a f tern oon. July 27th, surpasses, in the b >rrible character of its details, anything that we have ever heard pf before. The records of lynch and mob 1 iw, and of the brutal frenzies of the lower classes of Continental Europe, although they coh tain the record of many cruel things, are ftble to furnish nothing, which for cruel# aD d go far as can be judged from present indications, unpiovoked brutality, can equal some of the details of this horrible and murderous not. The immediate, cause of the trouble was a quarrel which took place between one of the old miners uamed William Trotter, and an Italian *bose name is known to the Citizens a bopt Church Hill, as John Church, gdw this quarrel commenced is not Known, further than that Trotter was jrunk and quarrelsome. The quarrel was probably augmented by several more - of the miners, and Church, seeing that be was overpowered, ran for the bouse ibe rest of the Italians were, and when he got to the door, cried to be let in Wh ; le the door was being opened, he turned and defended himself, and here H was that Trotter was stabbed. Tms is the hypothesis suggested by the facts known, and which are corroborated by several admissions of the miners. Church i 4 now dead; murdered by a bru that has noiqual in all the annals of crime, but hi# murderers, in letting oat the fact that Trotter was stabbed at the house, furnished strong circumstan tial evidence to show tbatChurch stabbed him in seff defense. The wound which Trotter received was indeed a fearful one. Tne knife entered atone side of bis neck, and went clear through, nar rosly missing thejugular vein and car otid artery, and partially severing the cord in its course. The wound was so severe that at first it was thought that he could not live longer than a few moments, but at this writling he is still alive, although the injury to the spinal cord has partially paralized him. Tne ri iters attempted to burn the Ital ians in the house, hut afterwards con cluded to open the door and kill them as they came out of the burning building. The details of the treatment the mur dered man received are brutal In the ex Ireme. I'pon visiting Church Hill on Tuesday 'evening, we found that the following p rsoDsbad been arrested and sent to Warren, where their preliminary exami nation, upon a charge of murder, com menced on' Wednesday David D. Mor ris, Ben j.R. Davis/John Morgan, John £ 2:50, Good order prevailed, and everything passed off harmoniously. —Tbe bearing in tbe Foreman-Soyder poisoning case, toijk placer before Justice Keck last Saturday. District Attorney Reiber and R. P.JScott, Esq., for tbe Commonwealth, and Charles McCandless, Esq., for defense. The weather was hot and tbe room crowded. Foreman seemed very indifferent about the matter, and so was Mrs. Snyder, until tbe evidence be came too pointed for her stoicism, when she broke into sobs and tears. Intimate and improper relations between Foreman and Mrs. Snyder were pretty clearly es tablished ; many letters between them were read fur this purpose, and more were offered, but, the justice thought he bad beard sufficient evidence to warrant his committing the parties to await their trial in tbe Oyer and Terminer next October. Which be did. Tbe physicians consider Mr. Snyder in a very critical condition. He is able to sit np but a moment at a time. The Sharon Times says : The second annual exhibition of the SbardtU and "Mfercer county H >rtlcultural S iciety will he held at the Opera House on Friday and Saturday, September sth and 6th. Those who attended the Ust exhibition of this association no doubt remember with pleasure the magnificent floral and vege table display made. But we are gratified to be able to state that the exhibition this year will far eclipse that, both in extent and is the perfection of the appointments. This year the competition will be more extensive, and the prizes much larger, while the arrangements are being made on a far more elaborate scale. Those who visit this exhibition will have no occasion v to complain uf the time and money ex pended. The majority of the Board of Commis sioners appointed to select a site for a postofflce and other government bni Idings in Pittsburgh,, decided on Saturday of last week, to select what is familiarly known as the Hitchcock property, bound ed by Fifth avenue, Southfield street and Diamond street. Thu property mainly P. Hitchcock, formerly of fa. The location is a good belongajo L. Washington,] one. anbetautlal Boor, shoe or Gait [•tore of John Kennedy £ Co., bey have the largest, best and Bearer county, andean suit yon For a nest and er go the cheap] Beaver Falla. 1 cheapest Block in if anybody can. ST 8,1813. From the last report of W. N. Aiken, Superintendent of common schools o r Lawrence county, we ascertain the fol lowing facts in regard lo the schools of that connty: Forty-one houses only have grounds of sufficient size, and but two suitably improved; one hundred and three without the necessary out-bmidings; twenty-five schools have not uniformity of tqxt books; efght entire failures In teaching the past year; seven new houses built; one hundred and fifty-three schools in operation thirty-seven of which are graded; in twenty-fonr schools the higher branches are taught; vocal music in nineteen of which eighteen are in New Castle; two hundred and thirty-one teachers employed thirty-two of which had no experience; twenty-nine exami nations were held; two hundred and forty-six applicants were examined, seventy-five never taught and thirty-four rejected; two hundred and fifteen ceriifi cates issued, five professional. Sure Cura —The following is a recipe for caring yonng men of indulging too freely in “tangle-foot.” It is customary when a person partakes more of this than his capacity is capable of admitting, to see him dozing away upon the bank of a public highway or in some secret spot under a cherry tree. The modus operandi of treating a person when displaying'sucb a phenomenon is as follows: When be is sound asleep, make a mixture of rails, logs and stones, taking an equal quanti ty of logs and stones mixed with about thirty good and strong rails, and make a substantial “fold” over him, and not leave him out until tbe influence of “strych nine" has entirely deserted the patient; then let him run ut large, and be sore be will promise not to get on a "beat" again. Try it! it works like a magic charm. The Pittsburgh Evening Telegraph says; Most of our readers, perhaps, remember a laundry of the wholesale order at Belle ville, N. J., where a Captain Harvey de termined two years ago to solve the per plexing labor problem by performing bis washing, starching and ironing by means of Mongolian labors. Twenty-four months of trial have discouraged the brave experimenter of New Jersey ; bis Chinese workers have been on several strikes a number of them have violated their contracts more flagrantly by surrep titiously deserting the laundry altogeth er. Captain Harvey has now only one half of bis original invoice of Chinamen left, and is anxious to exchange them for workmen of other nationalities. A Fiendish Ad. —The Lancaster Ex aminer says • A most cruel and inhuman deed was perpetrated by some fiend in human shape, on the form of Amos Good, in Providence township, on Friday last. Mr. Good is the possessor of three excel lent horses, one a splendid driving ani mal, being recently purchased at a cost of $250. During Friday night the stable door was pried oped' by some miscreant, who deliberately cut the tails from tbe horses, close up to the bone, and after fin ishing his act of barbarity threw the sev eral members upon a manure heap in front of the stable door, where thea could not escape being seen by Mr Good* Suspicion points to a certain farm laborer, who, Mr. Good has reason to believe, bears a malignant feeling toward him. Clinton Air Tight.—We are inform ed that in Salem, Ohio, there are two families, one c< lored and the other white, so e namored of each other that each mut ually (determined to name its children from one of tbe other. It happened, as sometimes such things will, that tbe col ored family got tbe start of tbe white and nut numbered i#as to children. The list of family names was exhausted and what should be done was the puzzling question. Now a happy thought flushed up iu tbe mind of tbe mother. If she could not name tbe little innocent darkey after a member of tbe beloved family she would . name it after the white folks’ stove. Tbe idea took and the babe was christened “Clinton Air Tight.” If that negro lives be will be a buster. Young girls from ten and fifteen a|e particularly injured by this sort of life, says a Long Branch letter. Rising at 10 in the morning, a breakfast at or 11, dawdling through the day talking and playing croquet until 5, then dressing for dinner at 6, then a drive, and after that the evening bop, is a programme for the day. The young girls are not satisfied with the attention of gentlemen or boys of their own age, but must have real growo-up beaux upon whom to exercise their fascinations. Little chits of ten nr twelve walk aronnd the balls on the arms of men old enough to be their fathers,and talk “growo-np talk" by the hour. And what Is true of Long Branch applies with equal force to all the fashionable resorts. An Improved Index,—' There has been a gentleman in town with an im proved classified index. The improve ment consists in classifying names under both Christian and six-names, as John Smith, indexed under J. & 8., making the list under each reference much smaller than when only one letter is used, as S of the above name. He asked 700 dollars for the county right, and we have not learned whether the Commissioners will introduce it or not, but those who have examined it say that it would save much time and labor, and faciliate the transac tions of business] in the county offices. The system is particularly adapted to county offices. The Lawrence Guardian says; A daughter of Mr. Reuben Stevenson, of Slipperyropk township, had a very nar row escape from instant death {by light* rI ig one evening last week. The light* ning struck the boose, passed down a raf ter, (raising it so as to throw it off the'; plate,) made a hole In title ceiling directly , over where Miss Stevehsbn happened to ’ be standing, burnt her hair to a crispy mass, passed down her Jbofly, tearing her clothing to shreds, and went through the floor at her feet. At last accounts she was likely to recover from the terrible shock. The other members of the family were considerably stunned, but escaped other injury. The house was protected by » lightning rod. Military Camp.~ The Reynolds Ri fles intend going into camp this year on Monday, the 11th inst, at Camp Dough erty, the same ground occupied last year. It is expected that the Sharon Rifles, Capt. H. L. Stone, the North Liberty Guards, Capt, J. C, Weller, and the Law rence Guards, Capt. James Hale, will join in the encampment. The camp will be under the command of Major General J. 6. Winans. If the programme is car ried out a military display may be ex pected here which this part of the country has not witnessed since the days of war.— Press. The Second Ward school of New Cas ta] open Monday, September Ist. The following teachers have been selected tor the present term: Prof. M. Gantz, Prin cipal. Room No. 9, Mhs Etta M, Belt; No. 8, Miss Miry C. Devlin; No. 7, Miss Mary McMasters; No. 6, Miss Ella N. Law; No. 5, Miss Anna C. Graham ; No. 2. Miss Anna C. Steen; No. 3, Miss Kate Bowman ; No. 2, Miss Ella Mcßurney ; No. 1, Miss Vena Montgomery, assistant, Miss Maggie McKee. Unclaimed letters in the postofiue at Rochester, Pa., August Ist, 1878 : Mrs. Sapronia Allen, Ailing & Bros, M. Aholtz, Miss Maggie Boyd, Charles Childs, Emma Cunningha n, Ida E. Dillon, Annis M. Dutton, Bella Hamilton, P. Hoppaugb, Miss Mollie Hopkins, Hen derson & Bleakly, Hattie 6. Johnson, James Leonard, McDonald, Burrell & Co., Mrs. McGregorry, Miss Mollie Reynolds (3.) W. H. Richardson (4,) Charles Ryne, Emeline G. Taylor (2.) 8. C. Whinny (2j) William Wbitney, B. L. Wilson, Emma R. Young. T. M. Taylor, P. U. On Wednesday of last week, as the Eric express was passing south, near Clinton they were delayed by several coal cars that had broken loose on one of the coal roads and run on the main track, tearing up the rails and ties for some thirty feet. The train was delayed some three or four hours, and the expressions made use of by many would not be prop* er to publish. The New Castle Journal says: An unmarried woman, about thirty years of age, who resides in the First ward of this city, haying come to grief by being dis appointed in love, took, a large dose of laudanum on Monday last in the hope i f ending her wretched existence, but the timely intervention of a physician dis concerted the whole programme, and in stead of being on the “evergreen shore ’’ she is still living in New Castle. Tea Cake.— Take one and ■ half cups white sugar, one and a quarter cups sweet milk', one quarter cup of butter, two eggs, well beaten, one half teaspoonful salt, flavor to taste; add two and a half cups flour, having It in one measure of Ban ner Baking Powder. Each can of the Banner Baking Powder contains a small measure, to be deed even full, according to printed directions. If yon cannot obtain this really valuable article from your grocer, send twenty-five cents by mail, addressed to Banner Baking Powder, P.O. Lock Box. 317, Pittsburgh, Pa., and you will receive, postage paid, a quarter pound package, together with a list of fifty valua-,- ble recipes. Tbe Wear and Tear of Life The cares, anxieties and misfortunes of life have as much to do with shortening it as disease., They are in fact the source of many ailments and physi cal disabilities. Nervous weakness, dyspepsia, affections of the liver, disturbances of the bowels, headache, hypochondria and monomania are among these distressing fruits. It is, therefore of great importance that persons whose minds are oppressed with heavy responsibilities or harrassed by family troubles, or excited by speculation, or perplexed by a multiplicity of enterprises, or iu any way over taxed or overworked, should keep tbeir stamina by the daily use of a wholesome ton ic. Thousands of persons thus circumstanced are enabled to bear up against the difficulties in whlch they arc involved, and to retain their strength, health and mental clearness by the regular use of Hostetler's Stomach Bitters. Diseases which are prone to attack the body when debilitated and broken down by over-much brain woik, or ex hausting physical labor, are kept at bay by the re sistant power with which this Incomparable tonic endows the nervous system and the vital organs. At this season, when the heat is evaporating the elements of strength from every pore, rn iuvigor - ant is absolutely essential to the safety and com - fort of the public, and is required even by the more robust if they desire to keep their athletic capabilities in status quo. Bence a course of Hos teller's Bitters is particularly useful at this period of the year as a defence against the invisible dis ease afloat in a sultry atmosphere. It is the most potent of all preventive medicines and for all complaints which affect the stomach, the liver and the bowels, and interfere with the perfect diges tion and assimilation of food. It is the standard remed^i-- MARRIED. CHAPMAN—SEAMAN—By Rev. J, G.Oogiey, July 3d, 1878. Lewis Chapmsa to Miss Annetta Seaman, both of Homewood, Fla. SMITH—BRADY—By Rev. J. Q. Goglcy, July SI, 1873, Wm, P. Smith to Miss Sarah R. Brady, both of Homewood, Pa. Beaver Fails, on the 39th ol July, by Rev;'J. D. Moorhead, : : Mr. David Wilkinson of Beaver Falls, to Mies ' Mary Shoemaker of Beaver. Pa. CAMPBELL—9AYRB—On the 80th of July, 1873, at the National Hotel, by Bey. Wm. Lynch, M*. Simoon Campbell to Hiss Savilia Sayre, both of 1 KelloggsviUo, Ohio. * a